Exclusive Q and A: Kevin Costner and Modern West Saddle up for a Tour
posted in: Country • Exclusive Interviews
KC: Making the record came from my desire to play live wherever I want hanging out. I didn’t see it translating into a tour. I found myself at golf tournaments and charity events, and I would be more comfortable onstage [performing] than standing out there signing autographs. I wanted to be part of the party instead of a prop. I have always loved performing and I love performing original music. There was no end game. This was not the idea, to tour. It was not the idea to make a record. Things unfold and I bent with the wind.
OS: And now you have this major record deal.
KC: I do not have a major record deal. I have to be very, very clear. There is no machine behind me, behind us. That has been the heart burn for the guys in the band. We could play 200 or 300 nights [a year], and that would change the lives of everyone in the band. I don’t want to do that. So one satisfaction has led to others’ dissatisfaction.
OS: So it seems everyone in the band writes?
KC: I write a lot of lyrics and occasionally I do a melody line. It all depends on how I’m feeling. More [of my] songs get tossed than are kept. Most often one of the guys [in the band] writes a song based on something I say. I might say “Hey, that is catchy,” and they’ll say “those first four lines are what you said.” Then we flesh the song out. That’s how our band operates.
OS: You played a significant role in using Dolly Parton’s song “I Will Always Love You,” in the movie The Bodyguard. What was it about that song that appealed to you in that situation?
KC: I think we all have had to make that decision at some point. Maybe someone is not the right person at one point, maybe you are star crossed, but I found a genius in that song. Melodically I was always moved by that. That was a song that was immediately received by [Whitney Houston’s] camp. We felt it was right for the movie [but others] said it wouldn’t get any radio play. I remember saying “Don’t be so sure.” The fact that someone would sing without orchestration [as Houston did] is heroic.
OS: Is your affection for songs by artists such as Dolly Parton the reason you chose to go country?
KC: I don’t think of myself as country. I know when we wrote songs country [embraced us]. We are influenced by the Doors, the Four Seasons, James Taylor, the Rascals, the Stones. I like [songs by such artists as] Marty Robbins. They just told a story.
OS: What do your children think of your music career?
KC: Two of them are in a band. One daughter is in Providence [Rhode Island] and my son is [in California]. They make great music together when they don’t fight! I think they are proud of me. They are much better songwriters than I am. Once in a while they jump on stage with me. They are also very protective of me; they don’t want people to make fun of me. I tell them that I’m doing something I enjoy. I will be OK.
OS: What is it that performing music gives you?
KC: I like playing live. I like the drama of it.
OS: What do you see as your next musical steps?
KC: I don’t know. I am feeling a pressure now that we are asked to play around the world. I am wrestling with us being able to do that. I can’t emotionally drive songs to be on the charts, though. I’m not going to be at radio stations [promoting my band]. That’s not why I started. I wouldn’t know exactly how to do that. I have avoided going on TV for many years now. That would be an oddity. It wouldn’t be organically real.
Find out more about Kevin Costner & Modern West, including tour dates, on the band’s website.
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